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The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter
The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter
Author: Beautiful Summer

CHAPTER 1

last update publish date: 2026-04-12 06:37:07

The graves had no flowers.

Lucien had never put flowers on them. Flowers were for people who still believed in soft things, and six years ago, every soft thing he had was buried right here in Ironmoor's ruins alongside his pack.

He stood at the edge of the row, arms at his sides, jaw tight. Twenty-three graves. His father. His mother. His brother Eli, who was fifteen and had barely learned to control his shift and more than twenty wolves who had trusted the treaty. Who had gone to sleep believing the Oakshade Packs' promise of peace.

They never woke up.

Lucien crouched down and pressed two fingers into the cold ground above his brother's grave. He didn't speak. He never did. Words couldn't reach the dead, and he refused to pretend otherwise.

But the vow was there, the same one he renewed every time he came, silent and heavy, and as permanent as the scar that ran from his left shoulder to his ribs.

Not one Oakshade Pack wolf would die peacefully. 

Not a single one.

He would make sure of it.

***

Draven was waiting for him at the tree line.

His Beta had the sense not to follow Lucien into the ruins, nobody did. It was an unspoken rule in Ashveil, the Alpha visited Ironmoor alone, and you let him.

But Draven's expression when Lucien reached him was not the usual careful patience, it was something tighter. Something that meant news.

"Whatever it is," said Lucien, walking past him, "say it while we move."

Draven fell into step beside him. "The High Council's mandate came through this morning."

Lucien said nothing.

"They want a bonding alliance," Draven continued. "Between Ashveil and Oakshade Pack. Sealed through bloodline."

Lucien stopped walking.

The forest was quiet around them. Birds somewhere above, and wind through the high branches. The Normal sounds felt wrong against what Draven had just said.

"They want me to bond with a Oakshade Pack wolf," Lucien said flatly.

"Roric Vael's daughter," said Draven. "Her name is Alira. She's a healer, not a—"

"I know what she is," Lucien cut him off. "She's Roric's blood."

Draven was quiet for a moment. "The Council is calling it a peace measure. If you refuse, they'll impose sanctions. Territory restrictions, trade freezes, blocked access to the neutral corridors." He paused. "It would cripple us, Lucien. We're still rebuilding."

Lucien started walking again.

Draven followed. "I know what you're thinking."

"Then you don't need me to say it," said Lucien, throwing his beta a side glance. 

"You're thinking about burning the mandate and finishing what you started six years ago." Draven's voice stayed even. "And I'm telling you that if you do that right now, we lose everything we've built. Every wolf we've taken in, every alliance we've formed.  The Council will dismantle all of it."

Lucien's hands curled at his sides. He knew Draven was right. That was the worst part. He had spent six years building Ashveil into something strong enough to take down the Oakshade Packs, and now the Council wanted to chain him to them before he could finish the job.

"How long do I have to respond?" he asked.

"Three days," said Draven.

"Then I have three days."

***

Lucien didn't sleep that night.

He sat at the table in his study with the Council's mandate in front of him and a drink he hadn't touched beside it as the fire by the corner of the room burned low.

Outside, the pack moved through the night the way it always did, quiet patrols, distant voices, the soft rhythm of a territory at rest.

His territory. His wolves.

He thought about Eli. About the way his brother used to laugh too loudly at his own jokes. About the morning, Lucien had found him trying to shift behind the woodshed because he didn't want their mother to see if it went wrong.

It had gone wrong. But Eli had laughed about that too.

The grief moved through him the way it always did, like pressing on a bruise, dull and constant and always there. He had learned to function around it. To use it.

But what the Council was asking felt like being told to shake the hand of the man who made the bruise.

His head jerked up at the sound of a knock at the door.

"Come in," he said.

Draven entered, took one look at the untouched drink and the unread documents spread across the table, and sat down across from him without being invited.

"You've made a decision," said Draven.

"I made a decision the night Ironmoor burned," said Lucien. "The Council is just making the road there longer."

Draven studied him quietly. "What does that mean?"

Lucien finally reached for the drink. He turned the cup slowly in his hands,but he did not attempt to drink, just holding it. "It means I'll accept their mandate."  

Draven blinked. That was a surprise, a real surprise, which was rare for him. "You'll accept?" His question was laced with confusion and curiosity.

"I'll accept," Lucien repeated. "I'll take the alliance. I'll let them send Roric's daughter here." He set the cup down. "And while everyone is watching the peace treaty, you are going to find me every weakness in the Oakshade Pack bloodline. Every debt Roric owes, every enemy he's made, every secret the Consortium has used to keep him in line."  

Draven was quiet for a moment. Then, slowly, he nodded. "You're going to use the alliance as cover."

"I'm going to use everything as cover," said Lucien. "The Council wants peace. Let them have the appearance of it. I want Roric Vael finished, and I want it done in a way that even the Council can't undo." He looked up. "Can you do that?"

"You know I can," said Draven. "But Lucien —" He hesitated, which was not like him. "The girl. Alira. She's not her father."

"She's his blood," said Lucien. "Right now, that's all she is to me."

Draven looked like he wanted to say more. Instead, he stood, took the mandate from the table, and tucked it under his arm.

"I'll send the Council our acceptance in the morning," he said.

"Do that," said Lucien.

Draven left.

Lucien sat alone in the dying firelight and let himself feel, for one honest moment, the full weight of what he'd just agreed to. 

Roric Vael's daughter, living in his territory, eating at his table. Walking the same ground where he had rebuilt something out of nothing after her father destroyed the first thing he ever loved.

He pushed back from the table and stood.

The vow he'd made at the graves hadn't changed. It never would. He was just giving himself a closer view of the enemy.

He told himself that was the only reason he felt anything at all.

*** 

What he didn't know, what no one in Ashveil knew, was that on the other side of the Northern border, in a room that smelled like old wood, a young woman was pressing her palm against a hidden drawer beneath her bed. Inside it sat a journal thick with years of careful, dangerous truth that would either lead them to their doom or salvation.

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  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 26

    The infirmary smelled of blood and unwashed field dressings, which told her everything she needed to know before she even looked at the patients.She looked anyway. Moving from bed to bed the way she had been trained to, starting with the worst and working outward. Three deep lacerations, badly dressed in the field, the kind of rushed work that happened when people were trying to keep someone alive long enough to get them somewhere better. One shoulder wound that had gone deep and been bleeding long enough that the wolf's colour was wrong. Two chest cases breathing shallowly in a way she did not like at all.She set her satchel down and looked at Wren."The shoulder first," she said. "Then the chest cases. The lacerations can wait thirty minutes, they are not going anywhere.""The shoulder has been bleeding since before they rode back," Wren said."I can see that," Alira said, already moving. "What did you use to pack it?""Standard field compress," Wren said. "It is not holding.""It

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 25

    Alira had not left her room in three days.Wren had come twice. The first time Alira had opened the door and taken the food and said she was fine in a tone that meant the conversation was over. The second time, she had not opened the door at all, just said she was sleeping, and Wren had stood outside for a moment and then left without pushing, because Wren understood, without being told, the difference between someone who needed company and someone who needed walls.Alira needed walls.She sat on the edge of her bed on the third morning and looked at the grey light coming through the narrow window and thought about nothing in particular, which was its own kind of thinking. She had done everything right. She had been careful and precise, and she had handed this pack the truth on a clean plate and it had not mattered. Her father's name had mattered. The fact that she was Roric's daughter in a pack that had bled because of Roric had mattered more than anything she had found or proved or

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 24

    "You are a long way from wherever you came from," Lucien said."Not so far," the rogue said. His accent was northern. "Close enough to know what you have inside those walls. Close enough to know it does not belong to you."Lucien looked at him steadily. "Last chance to walk away from this.""Last chance," Lucien said, "to walk away from this."The rogue smiled, and that was his first mistake.His second was throwing the first punch.What happened after that was not a fight in any clean sense of the word. Lucien did not step back. He did not calculate, measure or find a pattern. Something in him that was usually kept behind several layers of composure came forward all at once, and what replaced it was not rage exactly, it was something colder and more total than rage, the part of him that had built this pack out of rubble and buried its dead and sworn, in the specific and unforgiving way that men swore things over graves, that nothing inside these walls would be taken again.He hit the

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 23

    The training ground was loud that evening.Lucien had been at it since before the sun was fully up, working through combinations with Draven that had long since passed the point of being drills. Draven was one of the few wolves in Ashveil who could still push him properly, who knew when to press and when to pull back and who did not make the mistake of going easy because of who he was sparring with.Lucien valued that more than most things.He landed a clean strike to Draven's shoulder, and Draven rolled with it and came back low and fast, which was the right response, and for a moment they were simply two men working through something physical with everything else stripped away. No pack.No investigation. Just the ground under his feet and the work in front of him.Soren was on the far side of the ground with three younger wolves, running them through footwork drills with the focused impatience of a man who had little tolerance for sloppiness. Lucien could hear him from across the

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 22

    She found his office on her own.Nobody directed her there. Nobody offered to walk her. She had spent enough weeks in this keep to know its corridors by now, which ones curved, which ones narrowed, which doors belonged to which rooms. She had learned it the way she learned most things, quietly, without announcing that she was learning.She knocked once and did not wait for an answer.Lucien was at his desk, reading something. He did not look up immediately, which she suspected was deliberate. A small power, cheap but effective. She stood in the middle of the room and waited, because she had not come here to be rattled by a man taking his time with a document.He set the paper down and looked at her."You are going to want to close that door," she said.He said nothing. She closed it herself."I want to know who it is," she said. "The person you are protecting. The person who has been using me as a shield while they move freely through this pack."Lucien leaned back in his chair and lo

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 21

    Lucien continued.He spoke without note and hesitation, without once raising his voice. That alone was enough to make her pay attention. She had been in enough rooms with enough powerful men to know that the ones who shouted were usually the ones who were uncertain. The ones who stayed quiet were the ones who already knew something everyone else was still working out."Whoever did this," Lucien said, moving his gaze slowly across the hall, "was not careless. They did not act on impulse. They understood this pack well enough to know which deaths would cause the most disruption and which direction suspicion would naturally fall." He paused. "That kind of understanding is not something a stranger walks in with. It is something that grows over time….Over the years. From the inside."The hall was very quiet.Alira looked around slowly, keeping her expression neutral. Most faces carried the expected mixture of unease and attention. But there were others, three that she counted, who had gone

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 5

    Nobody came to show her to breakfast.Alira had been awake since before the sun came up, which meant she had not really slept. She had lain in the unfamiliar bed and listened to the sounds of a new territory settling into morning. Distant voices. The creak of a gate. Somewhere, a mut barking once a

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 4

    Nobody spoke on the ride back to Ashveil.Lucien rode at the front. Alira was somewhere behind him, between two of his wolves, with her travel case strapped to the side of the second horse. He did not look back. He had made that decision at Greymist Ridge, and he was keeping it.The forest road wa

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 3

    Greymist Ridge was exactly what the name promised.Grey. Cold.A long stretch of open ground between two tree lines, where neither pack had full advantage. Neutral ground, the Council called it. Lucien called it a place where wolves came to pretend they trusted each other.He arrived with Draven a

  • The Alpha's Enemy's Daughter    CHAPTER 2

    The soldier winced when the needle went in."Hold still," said Alira. "You're making it worse."He obeyed. They always did, in the end. Not because they respected her, but because she was the only one in Oakshade Pack territory who could stitch a wound without leaving half of it infected. That was

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